HIWU Hits Diodoro With Provisional Suspension

Top trainer Robertino Diodoro has been provisionally suspended by the Horseracing Integrity and Welfare Unit (HIWU) after he was allegedly found to possess the banned substance Levothyroxine.

Levothyroxine is a thyroid medication. According to the National Library of Medicine the use of thyroid hormones for doping to enhance performance in human sports has long been controversial. There have been claims of abuse of these drugs, but they have not been prohibited by the World Anti-Doping Agency.

Diodoro declined to comment and referred questions to his lawyer, John Holleman. At deadline for this story, Holleman had not returned a phone call from the TDN seeking comment.

Horses that were entered by Diodoro before he was notified of the suspension are being allowed to run, but he will not be allowed to enter horses thereafter. Diodoro will not be allowed to saddle those horses or visit the paddock.

Diodoro's upcoming entries include the GII Fantasy S. at Oaklawn, a prep for the GI Kentucky Oaks. His stable will send out longshot Midshipman's Dance (Midshipman).

In the cases where a horse tests positive for a banned medication, HIWU has put off enforcing the suspension until the results of the B sample have been returned. But since Diodoro's suspension does not involve a failed drug test, his suspension will go into effect after his horses that have already been entered have run.

According to the HIWU website investigators found the drug to be in Diodoro's possession on March 13. The notice of his suspension was posted to the HIWU website Friday. HIWU spokesperson Alexa Ravit said she could not disclose why HIWU investigators undertook a search that allegedly led to the finding of the drug.

Diodoro faces a suspension of up to two years.

Diodoro was the leading trainer in 2023 at Oaklawn Park and is currently in second in this year's Oaklawn standings. Training since 1995, Diodoro has 3,184 career wins and a winning rate of 21 percent.

Diodoro was suspended for the first 15 days of the current Oaklawn meet after a horse he ran at the 2022-2023 meet had a carbon dioxide (TCO2) finding above the permitted limit.

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Pletcher Wins Round in Supreme Court Over Forte DQ

The New York Supreme Court for the County of Schenectady on Friday granted trainer Todd Pletcher a preliminary injunction precluding the New York State Gaming Commission from enforcing penalties related to the disqualification of Forte (Violence) from his win in the 2022 GI Hopeful S. at Saratoga Race Course, meaning that the sanctions are halted until the court decides issues of the case related to due process and rules interpretations.

According to the Mar. 29 court order, the NYSGC had found that “based upon blood and urine samples taken after the race, that Pletcher was responsible for the positive finding of the drug Meloxicam in Forte. As a result of the disqualification, the owners of Forte were stripped of the first-place portion of the purse and, as a result of the drug administration finding, Pletcher's license to train horses was suspended for 10 days and he was fined $1,000.”

But, the court order explained, “Pletcher's Petition asserts that the Commission Order must be annulled and vacated because (1) Pletcher was found to have violated a rule that doesn't exist; (2) Pletcher was found liable based upon a standard outside of the Commission's rules; (3) that the subject rule is impermissibly vague; (4) the Commission fails to show that the finding against Pletcher was supported by substantial evidence; (5) the Commission Order inexplicably departs from precedent so as to make it arbitrary and capricious; (6) it adopts a Hearing Officer's report based upon an unlawful hearing wherein the Hearing Officer acted in excess of authority by permitting the owner representative of the second place horse to intervene in the hearing and to act in a prosecutorial role, despite not being admitted to the practice of law in the State of New York.”

The NYSGC, represented by the New York Attorney General, had opposed the motion for a preliminary injunction, asserting that since Pletcher raised the substantial evidence question, the entire proceeding, including any request for a preliminary injunction, must be transferred to and determined by the Appellate Division.

Supreme Court Justice Michael Cuevas disagreed, writing in the Mar. 29 order that the case must remain at the Supreme Court level.

“[T]his Court can only conclude that Petitioner has demonstrated a reasonable likelihood of success on the alleged due process violations and the alleged misinterpretation of existing rules or application of a non-existent rule,” Cuevas wrote.

“We are very pleased that the Supreme Court has decided to review what we believe are serious due process issues in this case,” Pletcher's attorney, Drew Mollica, told TDN. “We are also elated that the Supreme Court has taken the position that they will review the standard by which the Gaming Commission saw fit to disqualify Forte and sanction Mr. Pletcher.

“While it's early, the issues raised, including the participation of an unlicensed attorney to assist in prosecuting this matter, is something we look forward to litigating,” Mollica continued.

“Judge Cuevas has flagged these procedural legal issues that must be addressed before any appellate review. The procedural and legal issues will prove that not only should Forte not have been disqualified, but that any sanction of Mr. Pletcher is a miscarriage of justice,” Mollica said.

The finding of meloxicam, a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug, in Forte's system wasn't the entirety of the controversy when it was first made public nearly 11 months ago.

A more concerning aspect was that the 2022 juvenile champion's positive test result was kept from the public for more than nine months, and wasn't revealed until May 9, 2023, when the New York Times first broke the story, citing as sources “two people who are familiar with the matter but are not authorized to speak about it.”

Two days later, the NYSGC formally announced Forte's disqualification from the Hopeful S. while imposing the fine and suspension upon Pletcher.

Pletcher promptly appealed his penalties, and Mike Repole, Forte's owner, appealed the colt's DQ.

The commission then stayed the penalties while the appeals process played out, and, as the Mar. 29, 2024, court order stated, “The commission also invited each other owner representative of a horse that received a share of the purse in the disputed race to appear in the joint hearing as an intervenor.”

Prior to the hearing, Pletcher had objected to the permitting of intervenors and their roles in the hearing.

At the July 20, 2023, hearing, eight witnesses testified and 44 exhibits were received into evidence.

The hearing officer then issued a report on Sept. 30, and on Dec. 4 the NYSGC adopted the report's findings of fact and conclusions of law in levying the penalties against Pletcher and in disqualifying Forte.

Mollica won a temporary restraining order for Pletcher on Dec. 21 by filing an Article 78 appeal. Article 78 appeals are lawsuits mainly used to challenge an action, or inaction, by agencies of New York State and local governments. The parties were in court to argue their points on Jan. 8, 2024.

TDN emailed a spokesperson for the NYSGC seeking comment on Friday's ruling but has not yet received a reply.

The next steps in the process are for the NYSGC to answer or otherwise move with respect to the petition within 20 days of the Mar. 29 order. Then Pletcher may reply to any counterclaim or new matter asserted in NYSGC's answer by May 10, when a status conference has been scheduled.

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Clapton Returns Summers To Scene of His Finest Hours

DUBAI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES — RRR Racing's Clapton (Brethren) may be one of the rank outsiders in international markets for Saturday's G1 Dubai World Cup, but trainer Chad Summers, who won the G1 Dubai Golden Shaheen with Mind Your Biscuits (Posse) in 2017 and 2018, is embracing the underdog role against the likes of Ushba Tesoro (Jpn) (Orfevre {Jpn}) and Kabirkhan (California Chrome).

“We're not here for the accommodations. We're not here for the badges and the passes and the parties,” Summers said. “We're here because we want to have a chance to hold that trophy up and put our name in the lore of the horses that have won it in the past.

“We're 60-1 and everyone says we have no shot. And we like being there. We like being the one that everybody counts out. It's a comfortable place for us and we're used to it.”

Clapton, last year's GII Lukas Classic winner, made a pair of starts during the Dubai Racing Carnival, finishing third to Kabirkhan in the G1 Al Maktoum Challenge in January and again to Military Law (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}) in the G2 Al Maktoum Challenge on Super Saturday, Mar. 2

After some internal debate, Clapton–whose owner also campaigns defending G2 Godolphin Mile champion Isolate (Mark Valeski) with trainer Doug Watson–has been green-lighted for the World Cup and he'll leave from gate seven with Dylan Davis taking the ride. Summers and team have made some subtle tweaks and he believes he has the chestnut ready for the test.

“We have some working theories now as to what happened,” he explained. “For the last two months, he'd come out of the stall at 4 a.m. and we're waking him up at 2:30. He's not used to that. By the time he goes back in the stall at 7 a.m. he's been out of the stall for three hours. That's a lot of walking.”

It's a four-mile round trip from the barn to the Meydan main track.

“We're only taking him to this track three days a week instead of six days a week now,” Summers continued. “He seems like a fresher, happier horse. They have other tracks in the back and he seems just more like the old Clapton that we needed to see, because to be honest with you, we have too much respect for this race to run just to run.”

It's a bit of a full-circle moment for Summers this weekend, as Mind Your Biscuits is ironically the sire of one of Clapton's main World Cup foes in the form of G2 UAE Derby winner and GI Breeders' Cup Classic runner-up Derma Sotogake (Jpn).

“To watch him pop out of the gate and go on with it and just utterly dominate and then go on to the Kentucky Derby and the Breeders' Cup was amazing,” Summers said of Derma Sotogake's run in last year's UAE Derby.

But the gloves come off this weekend, make no mistake.

“Hopefully Biscuits can look down on me one more time and tell Christophe Lemaire to ride him like he rode him in the UAE Derby, go to the lead and battle Laurel River (Into Mischief) and go fast enough to help set things up for Clapton.

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Bill to Establish Independent Kentucky Gaming Commission Passes House

In a vote late Thursday night, the Kentucky General Assembly passed a bill to establish an independent Kentucky Horse Racing and Gaming Corporation, according to a press release from Senate Majority Floor Leader Damon Thayer (R-Georgetown), the primary sponsor of the legislation. Senate Bill (SB) 299 revises Thayer's original proposal to attach the commission to the Kentucky Department of Agriculture administratively. The legislative effort was revised following further conversations with stakeholders and House Speaker David Osborne (R-Prospect), which would now establish an independent Kentucky Horse Racing and Gaming Corporation.

In his support of the bill, Osborne drew comparisons to the Kentucky Lottery Corporation and the Public Service Commission. A Senate Committee Substitute was adopted to outline the corporation's formation and set forth a robust framework for its operations. Subsequently, the Senate committee approved SB 299 on Tuesday and with passage in the House was delivered to the Governor on Wednesday.

Currently, HRC oversees all aspects of horse racing in the state, including venues housing historic horse racing (HHR) machines. SB 299 seeks to create the Kentucky Horse Racing and Gaming Corporation as an independent entity that regulates horse racing, sports wagering and charitable gaming in the commonwealth, effective July of this year.

“With the passage of SB 299, we're taking a crucial step in safeguarding the integrity and prosperity of our signature horse racing industry,” said Thayer. “As a cornerstone of Kentucky's heritage and economy, it's imperative that we uphold strong oversight and management of these vital industries. I contend the success of this industry demands it be a stand-alone entity capable of utilizing its funding without having to get authorizations from a bureaucratic agency. I am proud to sponsor this measure to promote this integral part of the commonwealth.”

Under SB 299, the existing racing commission members would transition to become the initial board of the newly formed corporation, serving two-year terms. Future board members would continue to be appointed by the governor but would require approval from the Kentucky Senate and oversight from the Executive Branch Ethics Commission.

Read SB 299 in its entirety here.

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